>Does anyone know whether Conservation-l (from [log in to unmask]
>stanford.edu) is for museum conservators or spotted owl conservationists?
I guess it's been a decent interval since the last time I posted the
DistList propaganda, so...
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Conservation DistList
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Since 1987, a steadily growing group of conservation people, including
bench conservators, curators, scientists, and administrators, have been
meeting on the Internet to share technical information, news,
rumour-control etc. Because it happens that libraries, having been
involved in computer operations for several decades, joined the Net
earlier than museums, the bulk of the group consists of people from the
library world, but as the group grows, and more institutions and
individuals find their way to the Net, the scope of participation will
broaden to include all spheres of conservation. As it is, our numbers
include more than 1100 people from at least 18 countries, including
conservators from several specialities, scientists, curators,
archivists, librarians, and academics from a number of disciplines.
There are currently three initiatives:
1) An online forum, known as the Cons DistList. A moderated digest,
this is issued as often as participants send in material to be
distributed. It is open to anyone who is professionally involved--and
this is interpreted very liberally--with the conservation of cultural
materials. Students in library, archives, and museum studies, or
conservation science are also welcome. Typical topics include queries
and answers about technical issues, attempts to clear up rumors,
announcements of events of interest to the participants, etc. It is
relatively informal and geared toward quick dissemination / discussion,
rather than carefully developed argument. Less formal than a
newsletter, but a bit more so than a bulletin board, the DistList has
been in operation since 1987 (it is the second oldest library/museum
list on the Net). Back instances of the DistList are available to
participants and individual messages are available via CoOL (see below)
2) A directory of email addresses for conservation professionals.
It is updated regularly and distributed via email. In order to
receive the directory you must a) fill out a very short
questionnaire so that I can add your address to the listing and
b) send me a message via email, so that I can be sure that your
address works.
3) Conservation OnLine (CoOL). This is a collection of full-text
databases covering a wide variety of conservation and preservation
issues. It uses WAIS (Wide Area Information Server), Gopher, and World
Wide Web technology to provide quick access to information from
anywhere on the Internet. A mail interface is also available for those
whose only access to the Net is by mail.
I hope you will join us in what has been a most enjoyable and
fruitful experiment. The value of the networks increase as the
community of users grows.
These activities are taking place on the Internet, a world-wide
Network of Networks (Bitnet, UUCP, etc.). If you have an account
on any machine on the Net, please get in touch with me at
[log in to unmask] If you are not sure how to do this,
please feel free to phone me and I'll do what I can to get you
going.
If you are on Compuserve or MCImail, instructions for getting to
me are given below. If you are on one of the other commercial
services, call or write and I will be happy to show you how to
send and receive Internet mail (alas, there are several
commercial services that do not connect to the Net).
Walter Henry
Conservation Lab
Stanford University Libraries
[log in to unmask] <Internet>
415-725-1140 <NetOfLastResort>
>From Compuserve:
send to ">INTERNET:[log in to unmask]"
>From MCIMail
at the "To:" prompt type "Walter Henry (EMS)"
at the "EMS:" prompt type "internet"
at the "Mbx:" prompt type "[log in to unmask]"
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